Mexicans pedal their way to the U.S. border
Mark Stevenson
SONOYTA, Mexico — Many illegal immigrants no longer hike.
They bike.
The 110-degree heat and rough terrain of the Arizona desert would
exhaust the fittest of cyclists, but these migrants are often middle-aged
housewives or farmers, riding battered second-hand bikes for 30
or 40 miles.
The bikes also carry their supplies and belongings, so if rocks
or cactus spines shred the tires, they get off and push.
The prize? A chance at a low-wage job.
“We’ve seen them going by on bicycles right by our offices
... in whole groups,” said Mario Lopez, an agent for Mexico’s
Grupo Beta migrant aid agency, whose offices sit just a few hundred
yards from the border. “They’re usually old bikes because
they’re going to abandon them anyway.”
Most start their trip in Sonoyta, a Mexican border town where the
bikes are sold for $30 in a dusty, vacant lot a few blocks from
the chest-high, three-rail fence that marks the U.S. border. The
fence has prevented vehicles from driving across into the Organ
Pipe Cactus National Monument, but migrants can easily toss a bike
over and slip through the rails.
From there, it’s a brutal ride over Organ Pipe’s hard-packed
terrain. Though the park prohibits off-road biking, sets of fresh
mountain-bike tracks can be seen running down its foot trails, and
the National Park Service often finds abandoned bikes with crumpled
wheels and water bottles hanging off the handlebars.
Fred Patton, the park’s chief ranger, says “hundreds
and hundreds and hundreds” of migrants bike through the park.
No count is kept and he can’t be precise, but he provides
pictures of abandoned bikes. “It’s a relatively common
means of transport,” he said.
The aid group Humane Borders, which combs the Arizona desert for
migrants needing help, says it often stumbles across abandoned bikes,
their tires flat.
Many migrants simply ditch the bikes when they get to a prearranged
meeting point, where a smuggler is waiting with a vehicle to whisk
them away to a nearby city.
Some 500 deaths were reported last year of migrants who succumbed
to heat and thirst while trying to cross the desert on foot. No
evidence has turned up cyclists suffering the same fate.
The off-road course proved too grueling for Alejandra Valenzuela,
27, who fell behind with another woman.
“It was ugly, it was horrible,” she said. “We
were stuck in the park and nobody wanted to help us.”
Valenzuela and the other migrant woman eventually reached a highway
where they waited for the Border Patrol to find them and send them
back to Mexico.
While bicycles may ease the journey through the 500-square-mile
park, the ride is not for the faint of heart.
“It’s mostly impossible,” Patton says.
But migrants don’t fall into the faint-of-heart category.
“They tie their water and their possessions on top of the
bikes, and just push them till the rims are square,” said
park ranger Viv Sartori.
Associated Press writer Julie Watson in Mexico City contributed
to this report.
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